The father of the Pixel camera s success joins forces with Adobe. This could be a new chapter in the history of mobile photography
The best feature of Google Pixel smartphones may soon be available to everyone. This could be the first successful universal camera app.
On the one hand, we have Google Pixel smartphones . The phones are mediocre, sometimes even below average, but with phenomenal cameras. Or to be precise - with a phenomenal camera application and computer image processing, which squeezes the best results from the sensor both during the day and at night. Especially the night mode in Pixel smartphones is impressive, because although other phones have much better hardware, the Google smartphone makes up for it so much with software that the final result beats such giants as the iPhone 11 Pro or Galaxy S20 Ultra.
On the other hand, we have Adobe . Giganta-monopolist in the world of professional photography, videography and design. A company that has been making bolder decisions on the mobile market for several years, flooding us with new applications. The last one is Adobe Photoshop Camera - a camera application with built-in filters.
What do these two sides have in common? Well, it turns out that the man responsible for the success of Pixel cameras - Marc Levoy - left Google in March 2020 and now works at Adobe .
A universal camera app from Adobe and the creator of the success of Google Pixel smartphones? Please!
According to a message received from Adobe from The Verge, Marc Levoy is responsible at Adobe for creating new projects focused around computational photography, in particular focusing on the concept of a universal camera application.
It is not entirely clear whether it is a completely new application or an extension of the aforementioned Adobe Photoshop Camera, but the perspective itself is very exciting.
It was under Marc Levoy that functions such as the "Night Sight" night mode, portrait mode using digital image processing, and not an additional lens or the excellent HDR + mode were created.
This man knows like no other how to make photographic use of the computing power of our smartphones. Adobe, in turn, knows the image manipulation technologies like no other company. Their latest great achievement in this field - an artificial intelligence called Sensei - is able to edit an image at an unprecedented level. Remove the wire fence completely, fill in the missing pixels, or cut a movable element from the film and use the filling in real time according to the surroundings.
The combination of Adobe's great mind and powerful technological facilities could create a camera application that would eventually standardize such programs. Because today it is one big mish-mash. Each company has its own application and it is often responsible for the success or ... for the failure of the camera.
Motorola is always a crowning example in this matter. This company's smartphones have first-class cameras; the same sensors can be found in phones that take really good photos. And yet in Motorola smartphones the camera always fails, because digital image processing by the built-in application is simply average.
In fact, even an iPhone, which takes fantastic photos by itself, can do even better if we use a third-party application.
A universal application from Adobe could put an end to these problems.
It could allow, nomen-omen, universal squeezing of the sensors in our smartphones from the best.
First of all, this is a great opportunity for smartphones from the lower price range, which more and more often have really great matrices and lenses, a lot of computing power, but ... due to their "cheapness", they did not receive a proper budget in the R&D department for solid camera application development.
Users will be able to squeeze more out of cheap smartphones by using an external application. The producers themselves could benefit from it, saving time and money on creating their own applications and algorithms, instead paying Adobe's commission for placing their application on their device.
Of course, I am looking forward to the future, but wouldn't that be an exciting future? We have come to the point where this software is usually the weakest link in smartphone cameras.
And now the Adobe-Levoy tandem has the potential to give us a remedy and take mobile photography to a whole new level.
The father of the Pixel camera's success joins forces with Adobe. This could be a new chapter in the history of mobile photography
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